NNEWSLIVE
HomeWorldNigerian Airstrike on Busy Market Raises Questions Over Civilian Casualties
World

Nigerian Airstrike on Busy Market Raises Questions Over Civilian Casualties

A devastating airstrike on a busy market in Nigeria has killed as many as 200 people, many of them civilians, raising questions over the military's rationale for the attack. The strike was intended to target members of the Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap) jihadist group.

M
Mehedi Hasan Sajal
April 15, 2026
2 min read

Survivors and observers have questioned the Nigerian military’s rationale for a devastating airstrike on a busy market that killed as many as 200 people, many of them civilians.

The hit on Jilli market on the border of the north-eastern Borno and Yobe states is the latest in a string of attacks by the country’s air force over the past decade with a high civilian death toll.

Background

Nigeria has struggled to suppress multiple conflicts, including an insurgency in the north-east by the Islamist group Boko Haram, which it has been battling for 17 years. The group split in 2016, with Iswap forming in its place.

Meanwhile, the country’s north-west region is beset by armed groups of bandits, and there are regular fatal clashes between herders and farmers in the country’s middle belt.

Military Statement

Nigeria’s military said in a post on Sunday that it had “successfully conducted a precision airstrike on a known terrorist enclave and logistics hub located near the abandoned village of Jilli … [that] followed sustained intelligence”.

The statement, attributed to the military spokesperson Sani Uba, said: “Post-strike assessment confirmed that the target area was struck with high accuracy, resulting in the destruction of the identified terrorist logistics enclave. Scores of terrorists were neutralised in the strike.”

Local Reaction

However, local traders denied that Islamist fighters had been among them. “I don’t know if there were jihadists at the market. We are just ordinary people,” Mala Garba, 42, told Agence France-Presse while recovering from injuries at a hospital in Maiduguri, Borno’s state capital.

Lawan Zanna Nur Geidam, the area’s local councillor and traditional leader, said: “It’s a very devastating incident at Jilli market. As I’m speaking to you, over 200 people have lost their lives from the airstrike at the market.”

Concerns Over Civilian Casualties

Yobe state officials later admitted that civilians had been affected. “Some people … who went to the Jilli weekly market were affected,” Brig Gen Dahiru Abdulsalam, a military adviser to the Yobe state government, told Reuters.

Malik Samuel, a researcher with Good Governance Africa, said it would have been “impossible” for an airstrike to distinguish between fighters and civilians at a busy market frequented by hundreds or even thousands of people.

Isa Sanusi, Amnesty International Nigeria’s executive director, said: “You cannot trust the military to investigate themselves. Whenever they investigate themselves, the outcome is as usual: they exonerate themselves.”

He added: “These deadly airstrikes will undermine trust in public institutions and will even undermine the fight against insurgency and banditry.”

Previous Incidents

Nigeria’s military has killed at least 500 civilians in airstrikes since 2017, according to the Associated Press. At least 115 people were killed in 2017 when a camp housing displaced people in Borno was bombed.

More than 120 people were killed in two airstrikes on a religious gathering in Kaduna state in December 2023.

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation

Sign In

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

M
Written by

Mehedi Hasan Sajal

Staff writer covering breaking news, features, and long-form analysis for NewsLive. Tracking the stories that matter most.

Stay in the loop

Get the best stories
delivered weekly

Join thousands of readers who get our top stories in their inbox every week. No spam, unsubscribe any time.